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Diana Mosley: A biography of the glamorous Mitford sister who became Hitler's friend and married the leader of  Britain's fascists
 
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Diana Mosley: A biography of the glamorous Mitford sister who became Hitler's friend and married the leader of Britain's fascists [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Jan Dalley (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 2, 2000
Much has been written about and by the Mitford sisters, who variously dazzled and shocked their contemporaries in England and abroad: Nancy, as a celebrated novelist (The Pursuit of Love); Deborah, as Duchess of Devonshire; Unity, famously infatuated with Hitler; Jessica, as a young Communist, and then as the queen of muckrakers (The American Way of Death). But until now there has been no biography of one of the most extraordinary of them, the beautiful and ambitious Diana.

Married at eighteen into the enormously wealthy Guinness family, Diana had it all -- brains, beauty, social position and money. She bore two sons and created a sparkling society circle that included such artists and intellectuals of the interwar years as Cecil Beaton, Lytton Strachey and Evelyn Waugh (who dedicated Vile Bodies to her). But after only three years she was swept up in the love affair that would change her life: with Sir Oswald Mosley, MP, womanizer and charismatic founder of the British Union of Fascists.

Jan Dalley's careful and dedicated research -- which included many interviews and conversations with the subject herself, now nearly ninety and living in France -- enables her to tell Diana Mosley's story in fascinating, and sometimes grim, detail. Growing enthusiasm for the Nazis spurred frequent visits to Germany and meetings with Hitler and other leaders (the Mosleys were actually married in Goebbels's house in 1936); there were struggles to raise money for Mosley's organization and, finally, after war was declared, years of internment in Holloway prison. Yet at the same time there were friendships with people like Winston Churchill (whose affectionate nickname for her was "Dinamite") and, after the war, a comfortable, if controversial, return to respectability.

Hailed on publication in Britain last year as "a triumph: reflective, considered, intelligent," Diana Mosley brings an unforgettable figure to life, and at the same time throws a bright light onto an exceptionally dark episode of British social history.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

She was one of the fabulous Mitford sisters, immortalized by eldest sibling Nancy in the novel The Pursuit of Love, whose beauty, wit, and charm enlivened English society during the years after World War I. Yet British editor Jan Dalley makes it clear in this readable biography that Diana Mitford also possessed a steely resolve and a taste for extremism that soon took her far beyond the glittering social circle immortalized by her friend Evelyn Waugh and the "Bright Young People." Wed to wealthy Bryan Guinness in 1929, when she was only 18, she soon fell in love with Oswald Mosley and committed herself to his British fascist party. Diana made frequent visits to Germany and befriended the Nazi elite; when she and Mosley married in 1936, the ceremony was held at Joseph Goebbels's home in Berlin. Unsurprisingly, the Mosleys were arrested shortly after World War II began and spent more than three years in prison. Dalley is sympathetic to Diana's plight--she was separated from her 10-month-old baby when jailed--without condoning her views. Offering "reasons, but no excuses," the narrative concentrates on Diana's youth; two short chapters chronicle her long life after incarceration. Readers will probably agree that the glamorous party girl and fascist wife are the most interesting stages in this complex woman's life. --Wendy Smith

From Publishers Weekly

Diana Mosley (b. 1910) was part of England's Mitford family--whose members included Nancy, the novelist, and Jessica, the leftist and author of the muckraking The American Way of Death. Dalley, literary editor of London's Financial Times, ably describes Diana's unconventional upper-class childhood (satirized in 1945 by Nancy in The Pursuit of Love), her development into a beautiful debutante and her life after her marriage to the wealthy Bryan Guinness at age 18. But the bulk of the book--and its most controversial portion--deals with the years 1933-1945, when Diana, then mother of two, left her marriage to live as the mistress of Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists. Married and a notorious womanizer, Mosley had hopscotched from one political party to another until he settled on fascism. (Eventually, she divorced Guinness, and when Mosley's wife died, he and Diana were married at ground zero of fascist Europe: in Goebbels's home.) Notorious in England for their pro-German stance, the Oswalds spent the war years in prison; after WWII, they went back to their life of privilege and right-wing politics. Although extremely well-written, this book has some analytical failings--in part because, although Diana permitted Dalley to interview her, she denied the author access to her (and her husband's) letters and diaries. More troubling is the author's personally--if not politically--sympathetic attitude toward Diana, which seems to make Dalley unwilling to probe deeply into Diana's motivations. Dalley's only explanation for her subject's fascist activities is that she was deeply in love with Oswald. Photos not seen by PW. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; First Edition edition (May 2, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0394587367
  • ISBN-13: 978-0394587363
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,275,310 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another Mitford Rebel, June 13, 2000
This review is from: Diana Mosley: A biography of the glamorous Mitford sister who became Hitler's friend and married the leader of Britain's fascists (Hardcover)
Diana, Lady Mosley, though perhaps not as well-known in the US as her sisters, writers Jessica Mitford (_The American Way of Death_) and Nancy Mitford (_Love in a Cold Climate_ and _The Pursuit of Love_), is a notorious figure in her own right.

Marriage at eighteen to brewery heir Bryan Guinness thrust Diana into the limelight; she quickly established herself as one of the 'bright young things' who dominated the London social whirl. She knew everyone from Evelyn Waugh (his book _Vile Bodies_ is dedicated to Diana and Bryan) to Lytton Strachey of Bloomsbury fame, and became the very image of a glittering social hostess. I say 'image' because only a few years into her marriage Diana was swept off her feet by Oswald Mosley, a promising politician and successful lady-killer whose motto was 'vote Labour; sleep Tory.' Diana was later to claim that meeting Mosley, her 'kindred spirit,' had made her realize how empty her life was, how intellectually unsatisfying.

Leaving her husband and two young sons and living openly as the married Mosley's mistress, Diana soon became a convert to his political philosophy, which by this time had ripened into fascism. Mosley, the founder of the British Union of Fascists, was an unlikely populist, retaining, like Diana, all the trappings of aristocratic life.

During the years before she finally married Mosley Diana spent much of her time in Germany. Partly to further Mosley's career, Diana established herself in Hitler's inner circle. Her younger sister Unity, a rabid Hitler groupie, was to attempt suicide after the declaration of war between Britain and Germany, but Diana was more hard-headed than Unity, for whom Hitler and fascism were twin passions. Diana's intellectual acceptance of the fascist philosophy seems much more shocking by comparison, signifying a cold-blooded determination to minimize or deny the 'tricky bits,' as she was later to call them.

After the declaration of war, Diana and Mosley, now married and parents of two baby boys, were imprisoned at the direction of Winston Churchill, Prime Minister and Mitford relation. Diana and Mosley saw this as a vindictive and senseless act, but they were locked away for nearly four years nonetheless, emerging into a world in which they had no real place any more.

Most of Jan Dalley's _Diana Mosley_ concerns the tumultuous years I have briefly summarized. Dalley, although considered too uncritical of Diana by a number of reviewers, provides a balanced account of Diana's life and times. In a very real sense, allowing the unrepentant Diana to speak for herself serves to underscore both the moral bankrupcy of fascism and the 'banality of evil,' as Hannah Arendt termed it.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Explaining but not justifying fascism, December 1, 2000
This review is from: Diana Mosley: A biography of the glamorous Mitford sister who became Hitler's friend and married the leader of Britain's fascists (Hardcover)
Actually, this book is more a history of a whole family - notably the Mitford sisters - than a biography of an individual in the strict sense. Since the author was dependent on published sources and was denied access to the private correspondence of both Diana and Sir Oswald, it is up to the reader to take a view on the macro issues. Was Diana a fully fledged fascist? Well, up to a point, but she would have been against the Holocaust had she known of it in the 1940s. Or so we are led to believe. So maybe it's best to describe Diana as a drawing-room fascist. She was one of the very, very few people to have known quite well both Hitler and Churchill, yet she seems to have distanced herself from politics for the most part. In an interesting sidelight, we learn that Churchill wrote to the governor of Holloway, where she was imprisoned under the 18b regulations, suggesting she could take more baths than were allowed to other prisoners. This offer she rightly refused. Yet, in this biography, you never feel you know Diana intimately. She is usually publicly aloof, intensely private and obviously forever loyal to Sir Oswald. Her later life, following her husband's death in 1980, is very sketchily described. Dalley's study is an interesting gallop through a fascinating life. The dynamics of family life are the strongest point. But it will be left to future studies to analyse fully Diana's personal impact on the turbulent times she witnessed and, perhaps, helped to mould.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Great subject, flat book, June 15, 2000
This review is from: Diana Mosley: A biography of the glamorous Mitford sister who became Hitler's friend and married the leader of Britain's fascists (Hardcover)
While this book may seem interesting to those unfamiliar with the writings by and about the Mitford sisters, to a rabid Mitford fan it may fall flat. The author did not have access to Lady Mosley's letters (although she did have Lady Mosley's cooperation with the book), and the result is a biography entirely lacking in the Mitford charm and wit. Little new information is brought to light, personality is taken into little account, and at times the book is muddled and repetitious. While the author obviously did extensive research, the book was not a pleasure to read - which is a first, in my opinion, among the many books by and about Mitfords. Perhaps Charlotte Mosley, who did such a masterful job editing Nancy Mitford's and Evelyn Waugh's letters ("Love from Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford," 1993; and "The Letters of Nancy Mitford & Evelyn Waugh," 1996, both Houghton Mifflin) might get her hands on some more letters and publish them? The correspondence of all of the sisters would be a massive tome - but massively entertaining. Unlike this new biography. I'm very sorry, but it's true.
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